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Alternative Pension Investments: Unjustified Costs

January 27, 2016

New Jersey State AFL-CIO President Charles Wowkanech issued the following statement on the State Investment Council’s 2015 Annual Report:

“It’s outrageous that hundreds of millions of dollars in pension funds fly out the door each year and into the hands of wealthy outside money managers. New Jersey’s retired public workers receive a $26,000 per year pension on average, so the only people getting rich off our pension system are the fund managers reaping obscene fees and bonuses,” says Wowkanech.

According to the State Investment Council’s report for FY2015, the Division of Investment paid $373 million in management fees and expenses to alternative investment and global diversified credit fund managers. In addition, these fund managers received a total of $328.4 million in performance bonuses for managing approximately 28% of the state’s investment portfolio. By comparison, in-house professionals, who manage approximately 72% of portfolio assets, had operating expenses of only $11 million for FY2015.

Jeff Hooke, a finance and investment expert who has analyzed New Jersey’s pension system, says the pursuit of higher returns hasn’t worked out too well. “The fund would have made more money – $600 million in the last five fiscal years ­­– if it had stuck with its traditional public stock and bond mix,” says Hooke.

“This is an unnecessary and unacceptable use of taxpayer funds,” concludes Wowkanech. “Unless and until it is shown that we are getting our money’s worth from alternate investments, we should develop and execute a responsible plan to divest our pension funds from these costly investments. Taxpayers and pensioners deserve responsible stewardship of their investment dollars.”